In high-rise office buildings and hotels, use a separate master key for each floor or wing, thus restricting key decoding to limited areas. |
|
Football fans are not restricting themselves to only sports content while second-screening during a match. |
|
In the western world, the sea has come to be regarded as a barrier, restricting our movements. |
|
Temporary rules restricting the movement of livestock have been made permanent, the Government announced yesterday. |
|
They talked of restricting the gene pool in the name of purity of the blood, and all that. |
|
If money is tight and restricting you from having the flowers you dream of then why not consider making your own bouquet. |
|
This area is very traditional and unspoilt, with the tightness of the valley restricting development. |
|
Would the same apply to a mortgagee if the mortgage contained a covenant restricting the use of the land? |
|
Juice or fruit fasts are common, restricting nutrient intake to only those specific food sources. |
|
Several states have cut meth production by restricting sales of cold medicines containing pseudoephedrine, the main ingredient in meth. |
|
It is also expected that a bill severely restricting the local media, especially in the area of voter education, will be introduced. |
|
Early on, bingeing, vomiting and restricting food are usually driven by concerns about weight and body image. |
|
This can be avoided by restricting blatant and misleading advertising in the media. |
|
In one verse, he mockingly described how the president expressed his love for his people by gradually restricting their freedoms. |
|
I protested, trying to make my way out of the confines of the restricting hospital sheets. |
|
There was also concern that the height of the houses would interfere with the birds' flight paths by restricting their sight lines. |
|
The game comes complete with a single central bank, rules restricting lending competition, and the ability to inflate the currency. |
|
The authorities impose countless conditions restricting strikes, any breach of which can incur heavy prison sentences. |
|
It is introducing identity cards, restricting immigration, seeking to curb the right of habeas corpus and extending antisocial behaviour orders. |
|
Silk and artificial fabrics can cling, restricting airflow and causing you to sweat more. |
|
|
The Government has signalled a partial climbdown on the Gambling Bill by restricting the number of supercasinos in the first phase. |
|
Galileo established the circumference of the larger circle by restricting the subject matter of physics to statements about primary qualities. |
|
Seriously restricting food intake, or overeating and then purging, causes levels of vital nutrients in the body to plummet. |
|
By restricting the search space heuristically, the algorithms can handle larger number of sequences. |
|
Restricting demand by restricting access has often seemed to be the only strategy in the health service. |
|
First, doing so would raise prices, restricting flight to the carriage trade. |
|
Fishermen and their representative bodies have always been more than capable of policing themselves and restricting their harvest of wild fish. |
|
To date, 35 state legislatures have drafted bills addressing offshoring and 161 state laws restricting or banning offshoring have been proposed. |
|
These are divided up into small cantons, separated by armed checkpoints restricting virtually all movement. |
|
Five people were arrested today after staging an illegal demonstration outside parliament to object to new laws restricting protests in the area. |
|
Options studied include restricting southbound vehicles to the present bridge and northbound traffic to the new crossing. |
|
By 1966 most of the regulations restricting immigration of non-white people to Australia had been removed and multiculturalism was adopted. |
|
Shortages of specie stifled economic growth by restricting the money supply. |
|
A fourth element involves restricting fishing activity in one or more lakes. |
|
Scotland coach Matt Williams is absolutely right in restricting the selection of the national rugby team to home players. |
|
I couldn't win at a game of wallyball even if my competition consisted entirely of mannequins clad in movement restricting plate mail armor. |
|
After all, we do not want to waste unnecessary monies just on restricting his movements. |
|
They have begun to watch their diet by restricting the amount of fat they eat. |
|
In 2002 a team succeeded in restricting the spreading of light emitted from a narrow slit in a metal film. |
|
It is a disservice to students and to themselves to be restricting the flow of information to students. |
|
|
Unfortunately, restricting your intake of saturated fat, processed foods and empty calories is less than enjoyable. |
|
This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. |
|
The new military regime initiated a series of measures restricting civil and legal freedoms to eliminate potential political opponents. |
|
There is a condition restricting the output of gritstone from the Old Hutton quarry each day to 400 tonnes. |
|
On the 3rd of December, 1917 a general order was issued restricting the issue of sawback bayonets to rear echelon troops. |
|
The Labour Party manifesto said that it had no intention of restricting the sport of shooting and we will seek to hold them to that commitment. |
|
In response, she declares a state of emergency and assumes dictatorial powers, restricting many freedoms. |
|
It is true that within six years the French had redrafted this list twice, extending it and then restricting it. |
|
The gene mutation appears to work by restricting calorie absorption at the cellular level. |
|
The new rules restricting puck handling by goaltenders in the corners below the goal line inhibits one of Brodeur's greatest assets. |
|
Namely bowling round the wicket, restricting his opportunities to drive through extra cover and generally cramping him for room. |
|
Limiting the grass intake can be accomplished by using a grazing mask or muzzle or by restricting the area available for grazing. |
|
Still, some patients with coronary calcium have arteries that are partially blocked, restricting blood flow to the heart muscle during stress. |
|
Her hands and legs were buckled down in restraints and her head as well, restricting her movements. |
|
Latest figures show that industrial and service resources are being stretched to the full, restricting growth and hampering new investment. |
|
Although the movement restrictions are restricting business, farmers must use the livestock markets or risk losing them altogether. |
|
We are told the outage impacted a majority of customers, as well as restricting the company's own access to the system. |
|
Efforts to create water user associations in rural areas were limited by laws restricting their right to collect and spend their own money. |
|
There are risks both ways, risks in allowing young people freedom and risks in restricting it. |
|
Brotherston's sumptuous brocade and silk costumes give a flavor of the era without restricting today's demand for movement. |
|
|
Some, like Macmillan, have a page limit, restricting themselves to long short stories, or truncated novels. |
|
There's plenty of irony in seeing one monopoly accuse another monopoly of restricting users' choices. |
|
Where the law is restricting rights or expanding government intrusion into individual lives, the consequences will be the opposite. |
|
In the rush to secure the nation, government officials have once again looked to restricting access to information as a cure-all. |
|
Although such laws were most prevalent in the South, the northern colonies also enacted statutes restricting the lives of bondmen and bondwomen. |
|
Once you introduce laws, bylaws, legislation and regulations you are immediately restricting people's freedom, which is unavoidable. |
|
For both the abortion rights movement and anti-abortionists, members of Congress could prove amenable to restricting access to abortion. |
|
The medical centre argues that restricting antibiotic use because of the dangers of growing resistance may not always be correct. |
|
How far should a government go in restricting the personal liberty of its people in the hope of defeating terrorism? |
|
Human reproductive cloning is banned in countries that have introduced regulations or legislation restricting it. |
|
A drop in body temperature contributes to the risk by thickening blood and restricting circulation. |
|
Mr Clarke argues the same case, with added apologies for restricting personal freedom. |
|
The larvae feed on root hairs, restricting nutrient and moisture uptake by the plant. |
|
It follows, then, that Mark's idea of restricting access to alcohol for mean drunks is also a good idea. |
|
In the case of congested arteries, it is usually plaque in the arteries restricting the blood flow. |
|
It appears that the strain on his body was too much, and that restricting himself to one day games was all he had the strength and fitness to do. |
|
He governed Sardinia, expelling usurers and restricting the demands made on the Sardinians for the upkeep of himself and his staff. |
|
If they receive two yellow cards a player will be withdrawn from the game, restricting the team to 10 men. |
|
If they go and start restricting individuals owning multiple homes in different cities or towns, I would have to seriously consider my future in my homeland. |
|
If the cartilage is damaged by injury or worn away by arthritis for example, the ends of the bones can rub together, causing pain and restricting movement. |
|
|
By restricting aid to only registered groups, the State Department is colluding with repressive regimes, fear democracy advocates. |
|
Hardly any of the roads at present are wide enough and one-way systems would have to be introduced, restricting parking to just one side of the road. |
|
So if you reduce the profit margin by restricting advertising or imposing cost control, you will simply force companies to reallocate their resources. |
|
They obtained a gag order against the defendant and his lawyers restricting what they could say about the case for several months. |
|
Church policy changed in 1980, restricting conditions for successful laicization and thereby greatly limiting the likelihood that it would be granted. |
|
As a result, The Coast Guard is restricting boat travel around 15 bridges and announced potential searches of docked vessels. |
|
But the Sketchbook Project confines itself to restricting only submissions that might endanger the staff. |
|
As long as the meter is ticking, users will limit their time online, thus restricting their ability to fully exploit and enjoy what the internet can deliver. |
|
And problems of restricting information have to be dealt with directly. |
|
As their total opposition to abortion has made little popular impact, the anti-abortionists are instead focusing on restricting women's access to abortion. |
|
It achieved little until 1962, when agreements restricting the satellite countries to limited production and to economic dependency on the Soviet Union were enforced. |
|
Ohio Republican Janet Porter was fed up with Facebook restricting the voices of conservatives like her. |
|
Neither in World War II nor in the Cold War did US administrations go so far in restricting civil liberties or arrogating unlimited power to the executive branch. |
|
The turbo for example can be enhanced to improve combustion without restricting airflow, allowing the engine to burn fuel more fully and efficiently. |
|
Knives, bludgeons and handguns are the weapons of kidnappers, not rifles, which are cumbersome, restricting, and inappropriate for violent situations in close quarters. |
|
It is this premise that is the cornerstone of his recent policy on restricting the use of bodysuits outside of trials or major international meets. |
|
The operating system provides a means of tightly restricting the capabilities of user applications and system services to a strict need-to-know authorization. |
|
Temporary warning signs have been erected because spray is restricting forward visibility and, in extreme conditions, braking distances may be adversely affected. |
|
The U.S. has laws restricting bucket shop practices by limiting the ability of brokerage houses to create and trade certain types of over-the-counter securities. |
|
We are restricting specified risk materials, i.e. brains, spinal cords, eyeballs, etc., from animals over 30 months of age from entering the food chain. |
|
|
If you want to make top-drawer Zinfandel, planting it in cooler hillside spots is essential, as is restricting its yield and picking before the grapes are overripe. |
|
He noted that the depigmented areas sunburned easily, causing considerable discomfort and restricting his ability to work outdoors or pursue other outdoor activities. |
|
Increasingly, aluminium circuits were restricting the flow of electrical current, creating signal delay between the millions of transistors inside a chip. |
|
Many developing nations, on the other, argue that intellectual property rights inhibit economic development by restricting use of existing knowledge. |
|
In order to forestall this unhappy eventuality, she proposes restricting the use of the money to child care, education for the parent, or retirement benefits for the parent. |
|
Restrictive procedures promote weight loss by restricting intake via a small stomach capacity and delayed emptying, which causes a sense of fullness. |
|
The breast-bone of Pteranodon was relatively small, restricting the size of flight muscles, so presumably they would have spent a lot of time gliding and soaring. |
|
Panel of experts recommends restricting access to painkillers containing hydrocodone. |
|
It was achieved by restricting the ingress of air with either metal gauze or fine tubes, but the illumination from such lamps was very poor. |
|
In the following decades, state regulators outlined a similar role for agency ratings in restricting insurance company investments. |
|
By the early 1950s, the Soviet approach to restricting emigration movement was emulated by most of the rest of the Eastern Bloc. |
|
By restricting an operator's ability to exploit the current national oligopolies, the European commissioner hopes to urge operators to cooperate. |
|
Championship leader Schumacher finished second with a gearbox fault restricting him to fifth gear, having led the early laps. |
|
This was partly a result of wars in Continental Europe, restricting the possibility of travel there. |
|
As of 2010 The country faced high unemployment, economic collapse, a weak currency and poor travel documents restricting movement. |
|
Before the general elections on November 5, 2006, the National Assembly passed a bill further restricting abortion in Nicaragua. |
|
From 1956 until 1965, there was no rule restricting the languages in which the songs could be sung. |
|
Anorexia involves restricting the amount of food you eat, while bulimics binge on food then purge if from their bodies. |
|
If onomasiology is better served by restricting the field, semasiology performs better when restricting the task. |
|
The brief was submitted in support of a state law restricting the number of hours women were allowed to work. |
|
|
Certain public institutions may also enact policies restricting the freedom of speech, for example speech codes at state schools. |
|
Constitution contains a Contract Clause, but this has been interpreted as only restricting the retroactive impairment of contracts. |
|
So far, experiments with yeast, worms, flies, spiders, fish and rodents all have shown the antiaging power of severely restricting calories. |
|
I feel that this obligation damages pupils in terms of restricting choice and disaffecting those who do not want to learn Welsh. |
|
Its aim is to protect the landscape by restricting unwelcome change by industry or commerce. |
|
In social policy, liberalization may refer to a relaxation of laws restricting, for example, divorce, abortion, or psychoactive drugs. |
|
The Parliament of England retaliated with the Alien Act 1705, threatening to devastate the Scottish economy by restricting trade. |
|
The discovery has raised the issue of restricting some forms of fishery to protect the sea bed. |
|
Also, it is thought to interfere with the menstrual cycle by restricting the release of certain hormones. |
|
Peter's main policies were concerned with restricting the political power of the great noble houses and expanding the powers of the crown. |
|
In August 1241, Dafydd capitulated and signed the Treaty of Gwerneigron, further restricting his powers. |
|
This produced a reaction which led to all the colonies restricting Chinese and other Asian immigration. |
|
As time progressed, additional laws restricting rights were posted and had to be obeyed. |
|
A number of additional lamps were supposed to accompany each gang of men, but restricting the number was an obvious economy for the pit owners. |
|
The necessity of restricting catches to allow stocks to recover upset the fishing industry and politicians are reluctant to hurt employment. |
|
The government has recently passed legislation, effective from January 2014, severely restricting the size of cruise ships that may visit. |
|
Vertical mixing between the water bodies is therefore reduced, restricting the supply of oxygen from the surface waters to the more saline bottom waters. |
|
The band's situation made normal functioning complicated, with band members living in different countries, and legal barriers restricting where they could tour. |
|
The 1911 Act, it concluded, was not primarily about empowering the Commons, but rather had the purpose of restricting the ability of the Lords to reject legislation. |
|
In the new parliament, he opposed legislation restricting the hours of labour, and, as a Nonconformist, spoke against clerical control of national education. |
|
|
Nations without access to mines could obtain gold and silver from trade only by selling goods abroad and restricting imports other than of gold and silver. |
|
The Leeds Improvement Act 1866 sought to improve the quality of working class housing by restricting the number of homes that could be built in a single terrace. |
|
However, in heavily wooded areas, vocal signals are used more often due to the relatively lower noise levels and a dense canopy restricting visual range. |
|
He halted European migration inland, restricting them to the coastal zone. |
|
Captive life is also stressful due the requirement to perform circus tricks that are not part of wild killer whale behavior, as well as restricting pool size. |
|
Thomson himself never publicly acknowledged this because he thought he had a much stronger argument restricting the age of the Sun to no more than 20 million years. |
|
Darley initially welcomed the BHA's amendments to allow stewards more discretion and a greater degree of flexibility, but criticised restricting the document to stipes. |
|
The new strategy, to help cope with the town's growing popularity, involves restricting the flow of traffic at St Anne's Staith, Haggersgate, Pier Road and Khyber Pass. |
|
Despite these objections to restricting immigration, between 1875 and 1888 all Australian colonies enacted legislation which excluded all further Chinese immigration. |
|
But, even today, being on satellite television has the result of ghettoising the coverage, restricting the potential audience quite significantly. |
|
An HC was therefore effective in restricting lumbar motion in the axial, coronal, and sagittal planes, whereas an SC was effective only in the sagittal plane. |
|
Bafana Bafana had the better chances, but Angola defended resolutely, as they had in the 2006 World Cup, when holding Mexico 0-0 and restricting Portugal to a single goal. |
|
One was the continuous and regularly repeated practice of dissection, especially outside the restricted and restricting anatomy lessons done along formal quodlibetarian lines. |
|